Emerging stocks book cautious gains in thin trade

AP Photo/Mark Lennihan

AP Photo/Mark Lennihan

Published Dec 21, 2016

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London - Emerging markets struggled for

direction in thin pre-holiday trade on Wednesday, though a pause

in the dollar and higher oil prices helped Russia's rouble to

hit a one-week high.

MSCI's emerging market stock index eased 0.3

percent, with gains in Russia, Poland and some

Asian bourses but seeing losses in Asian

heavyweights Taiwan and South Korea.

Still reeling from the prospect of higher US interest

rates following last week's Federal Reserve meeting, South

Korea's won and the Thai baht hit multi-month lows

against the dollar.

The weakening came despite a South Korean official in charge

of foreign exchange markets cautioning traders about pushing the

currency too low.

But a rise in oil prices helped the rouble

strengthen 0.5 percent in its third day of gains, while South

Africa's rand gained 0.2 percent. The rouble has in

recent days overtaken the Brazilian real to become the best

performing emerging currency of 2016 against the dollar.

"Markets are waiting for year-end, investors are putting

small amounts on the table - no one wants to take on a lot of

risk here around the turn of the year," said Per Hammarlund,

chief emerging markets strategist at SEB, adding the overall

sentiment was generally positive.

Turkey's lira rose 0.4 percent in a second day of

gains despite data showing weakening consumer confidence

. With the central bank having failed to raise

interest rates on Tuesday, Hammarlund said the gains were

fragile.

"The lira is hanging by a thread. A renewed upward movement

in US Treasury yields, potentially as a result of Trump

pushing his infrastructure spending plans or at least a faster

rise in US inflation, would send the lira tumbling," he said.

Ukraine's dollar-denominated bonds rose to a 6-week high

after the parliament passed the 2017 budget overnight, raising

its chance of securing the next tranche of the International

Monetary Fund (IMF) under a $17.5 billion loan package.

"Although it is too late for a Xmas IMF loan tranche

release, this plus the nationalisation of PrivatBank should help

secure the $1.3 billion in January," Simon Quijano-Evans, a

strategist at Legal & General Investment Management, told

clients.

In emerging Europe, Poland's zloty fell 0.3

percent, underperforming its regional peers as senior

politicians urged the opposition to abandon their protests and

warned it could impact investment.

Polish markets have been under pressure in recent days, and

opposition lawmakers vowed on Tuesday to continue their sit-in

protest in parliament until a vote on the 2017 budget they say

was held illegally outside of the parliament's plenary hall on

Friday is re-run with all lawmakers.

And in its latest survey, the Institute for International

Finance (IIF), said non-resident investors have pulled a total

of $23 billion from emerging market portfolios since early

October, including $18 billion since the U.S. presidential

election.

The IIF, one of the most authoritative trackers of capital

flows to and from the developing world, said the US presidential election had triggered a substantial reversal in

fund flows, with nearly two thirds of withdrawals since Trump's

victory coming from debt securities.

REUTERS

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